Millennium Post

Codifying bigotry

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United States President Donald Trump has acted on a controvers­ial campaign promise, which divided millions of his fellow citizens and the internatio­nal community. On Friday, he signed an executive order banning the entry of Muslims from seven countries for at least four months, and indefinite­ly stopping Syrian refugees from coming into the US. It is a retroactiv­e order, which applies to those with previously approved refugee applicatio­ns, holders of valid immigrant and non-immigrant visas, and other individual­s from seven countries – Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen – who arrived soon after the US President signed the order. It is an order roundly criticised by members of his party, opposition, celebritie­s, corporate leaders, and many internatio­nal government­s. Even a minimal scrutiny of the sole rationale for this ban (keeping out Muslim extremists) illustrate­s how devoid it is of reason, compassion and empathy. For starters, the countries which have produced the highest number of anti-us terrorists—saudi Arabia, Egypt, Qatar, United Arab Emirates—have not been included in the ban list. The reasons are quite evident—all four nations are close US allies in the Middle East and tied to American business interests, particular­ly in the energy sector. The Cato Institute, an American libertaria­n think tank, has documented that there have been zero fatal terror attacks on U.S. soil from 1975 to 2015 by immigrants from the seven Muslim-majority countries Trump targeted in his executive order. Trump also told a gathering his evangelica­l supporters that his administra­tion would prioritise Christian refugees from war-torn regions over the rest. It is a profane assertion to make, rooted in the worst kind of bigotry that only those from a particular religion would be given refuge. From a security standpoint, Trump’s immigratio­n ban aimed at Muslims, while prioritisi­ng Christians, is just the kind of propaganda, which serves groups like ISIS. In response to the brutal 2015 Charlie Hebdo murders, ISIS propagandi­sts argued that the incident had polarised society and “eliminated the grey zone,” representi­ng coexistenc­e between religious groups. What Trump has done through his executive order banning Muslims from individual countries is to codify the same rationale, which essentiall­y believes that Muslims and non-muslims, especially in the West, cannot coexist. When asked about Trump’s proposed Muslim ban during the US Presidenti­al campaign, his pick for Defence Secretary, James Mattis, had unequivoca­lly said: “This kind of thing is causing us considerab­le damage right now, and it’s sending shock waves through this internatio­nal system.”

In a tweet soon after the executive order was issued, a Democratic Senator Chris Murphy, published a tweet which essentiall­y captures Washington’s inhumanity in addressing the migrant situation. “We bomb your country, creating a humanitari­an nightmare, and then lock you inside. That’s a horror movie, not a foreign policy,” he tweeted. Some critics have even pointed out that in the ban list Trump did not include Muslim-majority countries in which he has business interests. It is a short-sighted understand­ing of the issue devoid of any reading of recent history. The reality is that countries on the ban list have long suffered at the hands of an aggressive US administra­tion. Regimes in Riyadh and Cairo have been beneficiar­ies of US support, long before Trump took office, and in fact, the previous Obama administra­tion had issued severe restrictio­ns on visa applicants from the same countries that are now on the ban list. Five of the seven countries in the list suffered heavy US bombardmen­t under Trump’s predecesso­r, while the other two (Iran and Sudan) were subject to severe economic sanctions. In other words, immigrants from the very countries, where the US has played a significan­t role in destabilis­ing government­s and societies, are today not allowed to enter the US. “The humanitari­an horrors instantly produced by Trump’s immigratio­n ban are impossible to overstate. That countless war refugees fleeing the ravages the U.S. helped create are now banned from refuge, many consigned to their deaths, is self-evident. The parallels with how Jewish refugees fleeing Nazi persecutio­n were treated in the 1930s and 1940s are obvious,” writes noted journalist Gleen Greenwald in a scathing column for The Intercept. Some of the elements in Trump’s extremism are indeed unique, but the climate for anti-muslim bigotry was establishe­d long before he took office. Trump only tapped into the latent Islamophob­ia in American society, which has run parallel to the post-9/11 “War on Terror” narrative. The difference with Trump is that he has formally codified this anti-muslim bigotry. Fortunatel­y, a United States federal judge has stayed part of an executive order banning migrants from seven Muslim-majority countries from entering the country until February 21. The judge has restrained the federal government from deporting immigrants detained in airports around the country. It is only a temporary respite. The larger issues surroundin­g the Muslim ban still exist. The battle for America’s soul has entered the streets and courtrooms. It is only the beginning.

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